In the quiet coastal town of Eirwyn, where the sea remembers everything and the wind never asks permission, Nara meets Aksa-a man who stays not because he must, but because he doesn't know how to leave.
Both are survivors of a particular kind of love:
the kind that teaches you to cling,
the kind that mistakes need for devotion,
the kind that leaves scars disguised as longing.
What begins as comfort slowly transforms into something more dangerous-attachment built on fear, safety that starts to feel like obligation, intimacy that threatens to erase the self. As Nara struggles with the echoes of abandonment and Aksa wrestles with his need to be needed, they are forced to confront a painful truth:
Love can heal-but it can also bind.
Through silence, distance, and the courage to step away, they learn that staying is not always proof of love, and leaving is not always betrayal. Sometimes, the bravest act is allowing space without disappearing-and returning without demanding to be needed.
A dark, quiet romance about emotional dependence, boundaries, and the fragile choice to love without losing oneself, this novel explores what happens when two broken people refuse to save each other-and instead, choose to stand whole.
Because real love is not about never leaving.
It is about choosing-again and again-without fear.